Posts Tagged ‘brand’

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Sterling Buzz…

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Debbie Takes Alaska!

Check out these fine photos of Debbie’s recent visit to AIGA Alaska to give her presentation on Why We Buy, Why We Brand:

DM_AIGAAlaska (more…)

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BBQ’s New Best Friend: Jack Daniel’s RTD

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Read more at popsop.com

Read more at popsop.com

With summer and, more importantly, GRILLING season just around the bend, we’re really excited to see a new type of RTD out on the market from Jack Daniel’s– there’s nothing like whiskey and some steak!

Along with a nicely-executed design, we couldn’t help but notice that Jack is one of the first RTD mixed drinks from a major brand that’s housed in an aluminum bottle– a trend we we felt was destined to heat up in the wine and alcohol category. Aluminum is great for super-cold drinks, a lot safer in the backyard or around pools, it’s a sustainable choice and has an excellent shelf life.

Looks like whiskey is now out with the solid lead and we’re eager to try the new Jack. We’re curious tho- What’s the appropriate nick name for these tasty looking suckers?

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The Cute Factor

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

necessary_tech

Recently, I had to take the plunge and finally get wireless Internet in my home. I’ve tried to abstain for as long as possible in the hopes of living in the ‘real world’ from time to time, but freelance work seeping into my home life has rendered me a terminally virtual babe.

Now, there are few hassles as egregious as waiting in the DMV line, alternate side parking laws and the ever-elusive appointment with your cable/internet guy, but unfortunately they are necessary motions we must go through to live.

This past week I answered the thuds at my door, permitted cable man Stan’s entry into my home and found the process to be rather painless. I showed Stan into the living room and let him have at it while I simultaneously dried my hair, drank my coffee, set up my Blackberry notices and caught up on This American Life. Just as I completed my morning ritual, Stan was handing me an invoice to sign. I glanced over his shoulder at that moment and literally cooed at the site of
 a router.

Yes, a router.

All my life I’ve dealt with technology and found that whenever it’s a ‘necessary’ piece of tech it always has to be an ugly piece of tech. Looking over Stan’s shoulder I spied something that was much more reminiscent of an alarm clock-radio, in a lovely metallic blue and silver tone and a curvier shape than any router I’ve seen.

I know it’s just a router, but it makes a difference when home accessories match the dĂ©cor. I want to like everything in my home. To me, this is a symbol of Time Warner’s effort, albeit small, to fit into My life instead of vice versa.

Sometimes it’s the small details that touch us and help improve brand perception. Now how about some free WiFi at the DMV? Or at least a hug.

Rochelle Fainstein

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Brand Positioning- Time to Turn Up the Volume

Friday, February 11th, 2011

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Almost all agencies worth their salt include it as one of their core competencies. Almost every client of any sophistication acknowledges its importance. And yet, it seems to me, as an avid brand follower, that the topic of brand positioning and the accompanying benefit to the end user of meaningful difference, is totally absent from the everyday debate and chatter about brands.

Big question:  If brand positioning is that important and if it is so widely practiced, why the silence?

In my view, there are a number of reasons:

1.    The business of positioning is a fundamentally strategic exercise and over the past 10 years at least, the marketing community has become more and more interested and focused on the executional aspects of branding. Strategy, while appreciated, just doesn’t have the same sex appeal.

2. This point has been further exacerbated by what I call the “manliness factor” that still pervades many agencies today. A typical response would be along the following lines– “of course we can do positioning
I mean it’s strategic. That’s what we are, that’s what we do, isn’t it?”

3. More recently, we’ve all become (understandably) obsessed by digital and social media and these two together have turned up the volume so loud that almost every other topic in the marketing arena has suffered.

4. The topic of positioning has been further diluted by the absence of a champion. Many of us still remember the Ries & Trout book on positioning that was published in 1981, yes 1981. That’s 30 years ago. And the book is still in print and still being read. For a few years in the ‘90’s, Tom Peters took up the cause but since then, nobody has become famous talking about positioning.

What makes this situation even stranger is that consumers really value the importance of difference in a brand and in a 2010 research study that we undertook at Sterling Brands among 4000 US consumers, many were able to articulate the nuances between brands. They saw Pixar, Wii, Apple, Lego and Google as being very different. At the other extreme, they saw Citi, Bank of America, Capitol One and Chase as being almost totally interchangeable. The point here is that difference (aka positioning) continues to be important to every audience, whether it be agency, brand owner or end-user.

With no common standards and no agreed definition of what it means, everyone has set up their own version of positioning. And the result is exactly what one would expect…chaos! It is common in our work with clients to be handed historical or current positioning documents and this is where the problem can be seen more clearly. For example:

- on many occasions, positioning work authored by advertising agencies is not so much brand positioning but more communications positioning and yet it is referred to as ‘brand’ positioning

- when we see the work of digital agencies, positioning is often focused on just the digital opportunity, not the broader brand opportunity

- when we see the work from some other agencies, we sometimes see tag lines presented as positioning

- and sometimes clients conduct their own positioning and guess what, it’s often done by committee and the 300 words that go to make up the final prose often end up in inactionable jargon

Now please do not take this ranting as criticism of any of our competitors or any of our clients. That’s not the point. The real issue here is that positioning is a critical step in building successful brands and yet there is no single agreed approach that is contemporary and relevant to the times in which we live. With so much lack of consistency, we feel it’s time to bring some rigor and some discipline and some innovative thinking to positioning development. This would be good for everyone involved because it would level the playing field and the real leaders in positioning would emerge naturally from the marketplace and the faux ‘positioners’ would also naturally disappear.

It will take some sort of revolution to make this happen and it may not happen anytime soon but we’re ready, willing and able to be at the forefront of this positioning revolution. Anybody else like to join us?

Simon Williams

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Making Media Matter
Again

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

mixtape

As a media fanboy, I love what’s happening across all manners of digital distribution these days.  You can’t go 5 clicks without encountering a service that makes accessing and sharing media a snap.  Yet convenience is just table stakes – the tip of the digital media iceberg.  The “media middlemen” who win are those who not only leverage technology, but those who are bringing back some very simple, very human joys. (more…)

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Sterling Buzz…

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Y-we-brandHeads Up Connecticut!

AIGACT and the University of Hartford welcome Debbie Millman this Friday (Tomorrow!) who will present: Why We Brand. Why We Buy. An entertaining and enlightening look at the sociological, scientific and anthropological aspects of branding.

6-7pm, hors d’oeuvres reception

7-9pm, presentation and discussion

$30 members

$40 non-members

STUDENTS WITH ID, FREE


>>CHECK OUT ALL THE DETAILS HERE<<

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Pop Tarts PopUp, Make Noise

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Pop culture brands, similar to Pop art, need to connect with the consumer on an emotional level. These brands have long since evolved from their functional roles in our lives and transcended beyond a positioning that butts heads with competitors. Brands like M&Ms, the Keebler Elves and the Pillsbury Doughboy have an established personality in our minds that cannot and should not be shaken. Like many Pop artists, their style is instantly and internationally recognizable.

But has Pop Tarts crossed over? Certainly, it’s a love it or hate it brand, giving it a strong point of difference in the US marketplace. Currently, the brand needs to bolster its international status, and the influx of tourists through a Times Square venue will certainly spread the word. Clearly, with this positive brand experience brand managers hope to create new demand, especially in foreign markets.

For now, at the very least Pop Tarts is taking a risk and making some noise. The brand has a lease on its Times Square space until January and foot traffic flow has been steady according to reports over the past month and from what we’ve experienced at the store. How the brand chooses to evolve the experience with ramped up use of online retail and digital communication channels, solid analysis of consumer feedback, and also the places where the pop up store travels to in the New Year will tell us how much Kellogg’s has invested in really reigniting a brand that has true Pop potential.

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GOOGLE – All You Need is Love… Love is All You Need

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

valentine03

Google is a fantastic brand. Period. I only say this as a starter statement to clearly establish where I stand following a spate of recent articles questioning the continued long-term success of this 12 year old search titan. The article that pushed me over the edge was in the latest edition of Fortune magazine and it’s well worth a read [Click to Read].

So, in response to the question “Is Google over?”, I would answer a categorical “No” but let me add a few more detailed observations: (more…)

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Off-the-beaten-path, On-brand-Initiative: Well Done, Volkswagen.

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Volkswagen-logo

As consumer pressure for corporate responsibility rises, many companies are scrambling to find their cause.  (more…)